Edwards jury deadlocks on five counts, acquits on one count

GREENSBORO -- The jury in the John Edwards trial on Thursday found the former presidential candidate not guilty on one of six counts in his campaign finance trial and announced it could not agree on the five remaining counts. Judge Catherine Eagles declared a mistrial on the five counts and dismissed the jurors. It was unclear whether the government will seek another trial.

After the mistrial was declared, Edwards hugged his parents and his daughter, Cate, and members of his legal team in a quiet celebration.

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Eagles initially misinterpreted the note as word of a final verdict, but it soon emerged that the jury’s “decision” was that that jurors could not agree on five counts and did unanimously agree on count three. Eagles sent the jury back to deliberate further, but they sent word shortly after 4 p.m. that they could not agree on the five counts.

Edwards was on trial on charges of violating campaign finance laws in his run for the 2008 Democratic presidential nomination.

Count three involves a charge that Edwards received an illegal campaign contributions from Virginia heiress Rachel “Bunny” Mellon. Count three was considered by legal observers as one that would be difficult to convict Edwards on because the money at issue came well after his campaign had ended.

Edwards, 58, has spent much time since mid-April in a federal courtroom here fighting that charges that could have sent him to prison for five years on each count.

As he entered the courtroom upon the initial announcement of a verdict, Edwards appeared tense. His 30-year-old daughter, Cate, who has accompanied him throughout the trial, touched him on the shoulder and said, “I love you Dad.”

When it was clarified that the jurors were agreed on only one count, Edwards’ attorney Abbe Lowell rose to say Edwards would accept that verdict, presumably because the defense believes it is for acquittal.

Eagles instead asked the jury to resume deliberations on the other counts. But after the jury returned to the jury room. Eagles indicated she will not make them stay long if deadlocked.

“I’m not going to hold them prisoners here,” she told the defense lawyers and the prosecutors. .

Edwards is accused of conspiring to secretly obtain more than $900,000 from Mellon and Texas Lawyer Fred Baron to hide his pregnant mistress from the media, hoping to keep his dream alive of becoming the 2008 Democratic presidential candidate.

He is also accused of accepting campaign contributions that were not publicly reported and exceeded legal limits.

The jurors over nearly two weeks of deliberations asked for many exhibits until last week, when Eagles provided them with all — hundreds — to take behind closed doors so they would have them handy if they wanted them.

Before that, the initial questions seemed centered on testimony related to the accusations involving the $725,000 in checks issued by Mellon.

Then toward the end of last week, the questions came for exhibits tied to the testimony about payments made by Baron.

The jurors got the case on May 18 after testimony from 24 witnesses for the prosecution and seven for the defense. There were thousands of exhibits, including a videotaped interview of Edwards in 2008 lying to ABC newscaster Bob Woodruff, falsely claiming not to be the father of his daughter with Hunter.

There were many reminders throughout the trial that jurors were not there to decide whether Edwards had been a philandering husband or a politician with whom they disagreed.

They were there to decide first whether the money from Mellon and Baron were campaign contributions that went unreported and exceeded the legal limits.

If they decided they were they then had to decide whether Edwards knew about the payments and whether he intentionally violated campaign laws that would have required public reporting of the money and caps on how much the campaign could have accepted.

The defense team contended that the government brought an unprecedented case against Edwards.

The argued the Mellon and Baron payments were gifts that went from the billionaires to others, and they were used, in small part, to support Hunter, and in large part to feather the fancy $1.5 million Orange County home of Andrew and Cheri Young, two key witnesses for the prosecution.

The defense made the trial one as much about John Edwards versus his former aide, Andrew Young, as it was about the government versus Edwards, a former presidential candidate, U.S. senator and trial lawyer facing the possibility of 30 years in prison.

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